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Z. Naturforsch. 69c, 418 – 424 (2014)
doi:10.5560/ZNC.2014-0072
Effect of Debarking Water from Norway Spruce (Picea abies) on the Growth of Five Species of Wood-Decaying Fungi
Amelie Fagerlund Edfeldt1, Erik Hedenström1,*, Mattias Edman2, and Bengt Gunnar Jonsson2
1 Eco-Chemistry, Department of Chemical Engineering, Mid Sweden University, SE-851 70 Sundsvall, Sweden. Fax: +46 60 14 88 02. E-mail: erik.hedenstrom@miun.se
2 Department of Natural Sciences, Mid Sweden University, SE-851 70 Sundsvall, Sweden
*Author for correspondence and reprint requests
Received April 4 / August 2, 2014 / published online September 24, 2014
Norway spruce (Picea abies) debarking water is an aqueous extract obtained as waste from the debarking of logs at paper mills. The debarking water contains a mixture of natural compounds that can exhibit diverse biological activities, potentially including fungicidal activity on some species of wood-decaying fungi. Thus, we investigated the growth rates of such fungi on agar plates to which debarking water extracts had been added. The experiment included five wood-decaying fungi, viz. Gloeophyllum sepiarium, Oligoporus lateritius, Ischnoderma benzoinum, Junghuhnia luteoalba, and Phlebia sp. Growth reduction was observed for all species at the highest tested concentrations of freeze-dried and ethanol-extracted debarking water, the ethyl acetate-soluble fraction and the diethyl ether-soluble fraction. However, the magnitude of the effect varied between different species and strains of individual species. The brown-rot fungi G. sepiarium and O. lateritius were generally the most sensitive species, with the growth of all tested strains being completely inhibited by the ethyl acetate-soluble fraction. These results indicate that development of antifungal wood-protecting agents from debarking water could potentially be a way to make use of a low-value industrial waste.
Key words: Norway Spruce, Debarking Water, Wood-Decaying Fungi
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